Friday, May 29, 2020
How to Write a Resume - Step No. 3 - Strategy Wins the Battle
How to Write a Resume - Step No. 3 - Strategy Wins the Battle This is the 3rd post in my âHow to Write a Resumeâ series, you can read the other steps here: 1) Feel The Employers Pain 2) Know Your Value to the Employer Itâs maybe the most important of them all. Learning how to strategize your resume is the absolute #1 secret to opening doors and getting interviews. No exaggeration. What is a Resume Strategy? Developing a resume strategy means sitting down and figuring out exactly what message you want to convey. Most people think of resume writing as documenting their career history but thatâs absolutely the wrong way to think about it. A resume isnât a history paper â" itâs a marketing tool. By developing a clear strategy, you can then shape a message that will sell. A message that will make recruiters and employers want to call you as soon as they read your resume. Thatâs what your strategy is â" itâs the overarching message you want to communicate. How Do You Settle on a Resume Strategy? Weâve already laid the groundwork for your strategy in the first two posts in this series. So far, Iâve talked about how important it is to understand what employers need (âFeel Their Painâ) and also why you then have to fully understand what you bring to the table (âWork Out Your Valueâ). To decide on your resume strategy, you simply put the two together. You look at your ability to add value and you match that to the needs of your target employers. Where the two meet, is your unique value proposition, and thatâs the basis for your resume strategy. So for a sales person, the key message might be to show how much money he has made for various employers over the years. A marketer might be targeting companies who sell emerging technologies, and therefore his strategy will be to position himself as the âemerging technology guy.â A web designer might have identified her biggest strength as her ability to delight clients with her designs, and she decides this is what she wants to communicate. This may all sound very obvious, but the mistake most people make is trying to communicate too many different messages in one document. Decide on your strategy and then stick to it! (By the way, itâs OK to have several different resumes, each with a different target audience and strategy in mind). Translating Your Strategy Onto Paper: OK, so you know what you want to communicate. Now you can make some decisions about how to do that. Consider the following: What will your resume headline say? How will you communicate your core message right upfront? What evidence can you provide (all the way through the resume) to support your core message? How might you use testimonials from performance reviews or LinkedIn to bolster your message? What career accomplishments can you highlight that will support your message? Are there creative ways to communicate your central message? Conclusion By keeping your strategy in mind as you structure your resume, youâll have not just a boring career document, but what one of our clients called âa strategic masterpiece.â And more importantly, youâll have a document that will press all the right buttons for your target employers and will therefore give them a compelling reason to pick up the phone and call you. Louise Fletcher co-founded Blue Sky in 2002 after a career as an HR executive. She admits to being a âwordnerdâ at heart and loves to write. She developed the Blue Sky resume approach, has written two books, and has been a featured expert for sites such as Monster, The Ladders and HR Guru. Image: Shutterstock. Now read: How to Write a Resume â" Step No. 4 â" Design to Inspire
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